Police said eight cars collided just before 4 p.m. Monday on York Road at Shawan Road.

Police said an initial investigation indicated that a 2007 Lexus RX was stopped in the left turn lane from northbound York Road to westbound Shawan Road. A 2013 Toyota Sienna and a BMW 325 were stopped behind the 2007 Lexus RX.

A 2010 Lexus RX with a 1998 Toyota Avalon, a 2012 Nissan Quest and a 2011 Jeep behind it were stopped on northbound York Road at Shawan Road.

A 2009 Nissan Murano was traveling northbound on York Road when it struck the back of Jeep and the side of the BMW 325, causing a chain-reaction crash that involved the rest of the vehicles. Investigators believe that the driver of the Murano had been speeding.

Police said a woman from the BMW was taken to Sinai Hospital for treatment. Four occupants -- three adults and one child – were taken to area hospitals for treatment. Their current conditions were not known.

The driver of the Jeep was taken to Shock Trauma, where he remains hospitalized in serious condition, police said.

Police said the driver of the Murano, 71-year-old Robert Earl Shoulders, was arrested and charged with driving while suspended, driving without a license and failure to control speed to avoid a collision. Shoulders is being held at the Baltimore County Detention Center on $5,000 bail.

The Baltimore County Police Crash Team continues to investigate the incident.

WBALTV.com editor Saliqa Khan contributed to this story.

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Police said the officers had a warrant for the man, but when they tried to arrest him, he displayed a handgun.

Baltimore City police spokesman Detective Ruganzu Howard said the officers fired their weapons and that the suspect was taken to an area hospital. He did not specify the man's condition.

The man has not yet been served with the arrest warrant.

The officers involved were put on administrative status during an investigation by Baltimore City police. The stabbing remains under investigation by the Baltimore County Police Department Violent Crimes Unit.

John Boehner is facing his toughest week yet as speaker of the House of Representatives -- and that's saying a lot after a tumultuous four years of repeated efforts by his own Republican colleagues to derail his legislative agenda.

The battle to fully fund the Department of Homeland Security will not be resolved Thursday night -- and could come down to a series of last-minute votes Friday, the day the department is scheduled to run out of money.

After five attempts, the Senate finally cleared a key procedural hurdle on Wednesday to move forward on a measure that would fund the Department of Homeland Security, which is scheduled to run out of money on Friday.

The House cleared legislation Tuesday that will keep the agency operating through the end of September after a standoff last week threatened to shutter the agency and furlough thousands of workers. The 257-167 vote sends the bill to President Barack Obama for his signature.

Republican House Speaker John Boehner, who rarely casts votes, backed the bill, along with his top lieutenants. A majority of House Republicans opposed the bill. Just 75 GOP lawmakers joined with 182 Democrats to push it across the finish line.

The legislation does nothing to rein in Obama's immigration executive orders -- a top priority of conservatives. That issue was a sticking point for weeks as Republicans tried to tie DHS funding to the repeal of the orders but the party couldn't overcome Democratic filibusters in the Senate.

The debate sparked plenty of drama on Capitol Hill over the past week. The House stayed in session late into the night on Friday after conservatives helped block a bill that would have kept DHS open for 3 weeks. Amid rumors of a potential coup, Speaker John Boehner pushed through a bill that kept the agency open until March 6 -- just enough time to work out today's deal.

Boehner told his members Tuesday morning that he had run out of options and the Senate couldn't pass a bill with immigration language attached.

He asked if anyone had any questions and not one member stood up or complained.